Dear Readers,
It was unfortunate that last evening’s School Committee meeting was neither taped for cable broadcast nor attended by any of our newspaper reporters.
Chair Barbara Whidden opened the meeting with a statement that she had indeed been informed, in May, by Dr. Marini, about the NEASC warning. She said that he expressed a desire to meet with NEASC officials to review and ascertain the accuracy of the report before discussing the warning publicly. She gave him permission to proceed. Both Chairman Whidden and Dr. Marini said that, in retrospect, perhaps they should have announced the news first.
I am taking a very practical approach to this news:
1. Regardless of when the warning news was announced, or by whom, the plan of action would not have changed. Dr. Scuzzarella and her team have been working double-time to improve the North Andover High School academic experience with little to no additional funding.
2. I am relieved; it is far more reassuring to me to know that the open and honest relationship between Dr. Marini and our School Committee Chair is intact. I may have disagreed with their decision to delay release of the warning news – but the end result has not changed.
3. I am encouraged that elected officials - on both sides of our town government - are steadily learning to trust in the importance of an informed public vs. a reactionary public. Providing honest answers, upfront, breeds respect and understanding, even when the going gets rough. North Andover local government has moved light years ahead just in the past year and a half – changing the way we do business is never easy or quick – but I see us taking giant steps forward.
As for the NEASC warning, I am having a bit of an epiphany – I’m beginning to think that NEASC has some major explaining to do, and I’ll explain why. NAU and the Andover/North Andover League of Women Voters have teamed up to co-sponsor a Municipal Conference/Forum event on October 1st in our High School Auditorium. You’ll see the flyer shortly – attendees will include elected local and state leaders from over 50 comparable communities and the topic is “Mid-sized Municipalities: Do We Have a Voice in the Massachusetts Economy? Is Anyone Listening?” Michael Widmer, President of the Massachusetts Taxpayer’s Association is one of our featured speakers. Part of our prep work includes pulling together email distribution information from all of those communities. It’s tedious work [because we have to visit every town’s website and search out the data], but it’s been enlightening work.
I’m learning that:
1. North Andover’s elected, appointed and employed leaders are wonderfully accessible to the general public compared to other communities. It’s no wonder that our Town received an award this year for the depth of both document info and contact info available online to citizens.
2. Many, many Massachusetts communities with really good school systems – some in the excellent category – are on NEASC warning status and have been for some time.
3. Check out the link for the Norton School Committee at
http://www.nortonschoolcommittee.org/ . If you read their home page statement about their accreditation warning statement, it reads as though it were written for North Andover. Warning status given for academic issues already corrected for? Sounds familiar…
My conclusion: “Somebody” [Eagle-Trib? Globe?] needs to do some investigative reporting. Accreditation is important – NEASC is the only national Assoc. that does the accreditation – but how many or what percentage of Massachusetts high schools are currently on warning status? If the number is significant, it dilutes the impact of the warning. If warnings are issued for cookie-cutter academic reasons that public high schools can not address with the financial resources available to them, we need to know that.
I asked our School Committee and Dr. Marini to post our NEASC warning information publicly on the schools’ website [they said it is currently available at the Stevens Memorial Library].
If accountability is what we want, Chairman Whidden and Dr. Marini met the challenge. If accreditation is what we want, we are fully accredited and the warning status is being addressed in a prompt, reasonable manner. If great schools are what we want, we’re there, and we continue to set the bar higher every day. The challenges we face are not one iota particular to just North Andover – it’s how we face them that makes the difference. I am confident we’re more than equipped to do the job right.
Sincerely,
Sandy Gleed